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...championship of America. The limit of weight will be 650 pounds with a round belt, under National Association rules. The secretary of the club will be at the New Haven House, Saturday, to receive entries for Yale teams. Princeton, Columbia, Harvard, 23rd Regiment, Crescents of Tynn and Nassaus will enter teams. There will also be at the same time the following handicap events for gold and silver medals: Fifty yards dash, 220-yards run, 600-yards run, one-mile run, one-mile walk, two-mile bicycle race and running high jump, open to all amateurs. Entries close Feb. 12, with...
Several single events will undoubtedly fall to the other colleges, but none will approach dangerously near to the great Universities. Sherrill, Sherman, Berger, Harmer and Coxe, who took prizes at Mott Haven last season, are still in college, although Coxe will not enter unless it is absolutely necessary. Sherrill will undoubtedly win the 100-yards dash, although Rogers of Harvard will be a close second and push him for first place. Sherrill and Robinson both have a fair chance in the 220-yard dash, but neither is a sure winner against Wells of Harvard and Banks of Columbia...
...record at that distance, and Wells, of Harvard, who is remarkably fast and will push Banks very closely for first place. In the half-mile run, too, Yale is pretty weak, and unless some new man turns up this event will go to Cogswell, of Harvard, who was entered in the fall games last year, or Faries, of the U. of P. Both of these men are strong runners at that distance and the winner will have to make good time. Dana, of Harvard, is also a good man for the half mile. Harmar, Yale, '90, will not have much...
...Anagnos' article, which we publish to-day, has in it many elements of interest to us here, where all forms of athletics enter so largely into our daily life. There is scarcely a necessity for an argument in favor of athletics in a place where such sports are so deeply rooted. The forms, not the facts; the details, not the whole, are the subjects of controversy. Yet Mr. Anagnos has formulated a peculiarly fascinating and eloquent plea in favor of athletics, his arguments being based solely on the good results attained by the development of a sound body. The enjoyment...
...current number of the University contains a communication from Dr. McCosh on the suitable age for young men to enter college...